RELATION OF ULTRAVIOLET-INDUCED MUTATIONS TO SPECIATION IN DERMATOPHYTES
- 1 October 1945
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Dermatology
- Vol. 52 (4) , 257-261
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archderm.1945.01510280041009
Abstract
Variability of a sort not susceptible to genetic analysis is a frequently observed phenomenon among fungi and bacteria1 and is an important interfering factor in the recognition and identification of pathogenic fungi. It is important from the standpoint of any systematic study that the permanence, frequency and extent of such variation be known. In the case of some fungi, mutants have been subjected to genetic analysis.2 The sudden appearance, diversity and permanence of the type of variation under discussion and the genetic behavior of analogous variants in neurosporan and in yeasts seem to justify the designation "mutant" for these variants. The published report3 of a series of remarkable mutations appearing spontaneously in an old culture of the pathogenic fungus Microsporon gypseum concluded with the hypothesis, "many of the dermatophytes now known as species are only varieties of a single unstable species."4 The conKeywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Action of Ultraviolet Radiation on Dermatophytes. II. Mutations Induced in Cultures of Dermatophytes by Exposure of Spores to Monochromatic Ultraviolet RadiationAmerican Journal of Botany, 1939
- The action of ultraviolet radiation on dermatophytes. I. The fungicidal effect of monochromatic ultraviolet radiation on the spores of Trichophyton mentagrophytesJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1939